Insights

You learn a lot when you spend months reporting on a given issue or community, as our fellows can attest. Whether you’re embarking on a big new story or seeking to go deeper on a given issue, it pays to learn from those who’ve already put in the shoe leather and crunched the data. In these essays and columns, our community of journalists steps back from the notebooks and tape to reflect on key lessons, highlight urgent themes, and offer sage advice on the essential health stories of the day. 

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>New York state has an interesting job that is foreign to
most other states, the office of the <a href="http://www.omig.state.ny.us/data/">Medicaid Inspector General</a>. Lucky for health writers, the Inspector General there, <a href="http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?category=state&amp;story… G. Sheehan</a>, believes not only in rooting out people who are ripping off taxpayers, but in sharing his techniques and tactics with reporters. </p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>Just when you thought it was <a href="http://southwestfarmpress.com/peanuts/peanut-butter-sales-0624/">safe</…; to make that triple-decker peanut butter and banana sandwich, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has slapped another big peanut processor with a warning letter.</p><p>I wrote about the salmonella outbreak at a <a href="/blogs/making-peanuts-pay-rochester-reporter%E2%80%99s-work-shows-how-go-deep-and-go-local-national-food-safe">Peanut Corporation of America</a> plant in March and offered some advice on how to investigate our national food safety system. </p>

Author(s)
By Eric Eyre

<p>The national story of poor dental health and its implications — former U.S. Surgeon General David Satcher called it a "silent epidemic" in 2000 — isn't getting the attention it deserves. Journalist Eric Eyre lays out the issues and offers tips for covering dental health in your community.&nbsp;</p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>Robin Lowe went to the Sano Medical Clinic in Costa Mesa one June with what appeared to be an obvious and urgent problem. She had felt a lump in her left breast. </p><p>At 29, she was young to develop breast cancer. Making matters worse, she was pregnant.</p><p><a href="http://www2.dca.ca.gov/pls/wllpub/WLLQRYNA$LCEV2.QueryView?P_LICENSE_NU…. James Stirbl</a>, the doctor who ran the clinic, examined Lowe but did not recommend she undergo a mammogram or a biopsy, according to the Medical Board of California.</p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>Walt Bogdanich, three-time <a href="http://www.pulitzer.org/faceted_search/results/bogdanich">Pulitzer</a>-… New York Times reporter, has written a <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/21/health/21radiation.html">phenomenal story</a> about cancer care at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Philadelphia and tapped into a rich source of material for medical writers: the <a href="http://www.nrc.gov">Nuclear Regulatory Commission</a>.</p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>My fellow contributing editor here at ReportingonHealth, Barbara Feder Ostrov, suggested I might be beating up unnecessarily on Stanford neurosurgeon <a href="/blogs/contraindications-dr-doyle-john-borchers">Dr. Doyle John Borchers III</a> in my post Wednesday.</p><p>After all, the poor guy did crash his plane and die. Why go over his alleged drug history? </p><p>Here's why. One of my main goals in this blog is to explore all the different places you can find information for health stories. </p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>When Stanford University neurosurgeon and amateur pilot <a href="http://www2.dca.ca.gov/pls/wllpub/WLLQRYNA$LCEV2.QueryView?P_LICENSE_NU… John Borchers III</a> (California License No. 64879) crashed his plane near Lake Tahoe last August, investigators wondered what the hell he was doing flying a plane at night in a mountainous area in the first place.</p><p>Borchers, who died in the crash, had been flying sporadically for less than a year and had only flown at night once before - the night before the crash.</p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>Devoted fans of Antidote no doubt read my interview with <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="/blogs/qa-mark-katches-editor-breaks-reporting-down-chemical-level">Mark Katches</a> a few weeks ago. Katches was just named the editorial director for the Center for Investigative Reporting's new <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.centerforinvestigativereporting.org/blogs#4109">reporting project</a> in California. </p>

Author(s)
By William Heisel

<p>Food is packaged with a veneer of sincerity. Contents are dutifully itemized along with tables showing the percentage of recommended nutrients, fat content, etc. But there is much that remains a mystery. You are never going to see a candy wrapper that says, "May contain lead."</p>

Author(s)
By Barbara Feder Ostrov

<p>The World Health Organization today <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/homepageCrisis/idUSNLB765857._CH_.2400">… swine flu to be the first global pandemic since 1968</a>, raising its pandemic flu alert to"phasesix" on a six-point scale. Careful with the definitions: while the disease caused by the H1N1 virus is considered to be moderate, swine flu is considered to be unstoppable and countries are urged to come up with long-term plans for combating its spread. </p>